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Nine Dead As Powerful Quake Hits Southern Iran Island

Iranians injured in the earthquake which hit the island of Qeshm are treated at Shahid Mohammadi hospital in the southern port of Bandar Abbas 27 November 2005. An earthquake measuring 5.9 on the open-ended Richter scale hit the Persian Gulf island of Qeshm, killling nine people and injuring scores more. AFP photo.

Tehran (AFP) Nov 27, 2005
Nine people were killed and scores more injured Sunday when a powerful earthquake measuring close to 6.0 on the Richter scale struck an island off Iran's southern coast, officials said.

Five villages were damaged when the quake hit Qeshm island at 1:53 pm (1023 GMT) and was felt for more than 10 seconds.

"The toll stands at nine dead and we are not expecting it to increase. Between 70 and 80 people were injured," Qeshm island governor Heydar Alishbandi told AFP by telephone after touring the affected area.

The Gulf island, home to some 100,000 people, is situated off the coast from the large port city of Bandar Abbas.

"Three helicopters are taking the injured to hospitals in Bandar Abbas and ferries are available if needed. Tents and other relief supplies have been sent to the area," he added.

Another tremor, measuring 5.5 on the Richter scale, hit the same area hours later at 8:41 pm (1711 GMT), the official Irna agency said, althouth there were no immediate reports of damage or casualties from the second quake.

Iranian state television put the intensity of the first quake at 5.9 on the Richter scale, the US Geological Survey put the magnitude slightly higher at 6.1 while a seismic observatory in the French city of Strasbourg put it at 5.6.

Alishbandi said five villages suffered damage of between 40 and 70 percent, adding that most of the homes "are made of mud bricks so are now unsafe."

The rocky and barren island was hit almost two years after the southeastern city of Bam -- situated 300 kilometres (190 miles) to the north -- was destroyed in a quake that killed tens of thousands of people.

Qeshm, located 1,150 kilometres (700 miles) southeast of Tehran, has a busy commercial and fishing port and is also a popular weekend sunshine getaway for Iranian tourists.

However the governor said the island's main town, also called Qeshm, was undamaged. The affected villages were identified as Gabardin, Tonban, Karvan, Tourian and Khaldin -- all situated in the less densely populated west of the island.

Iran sits astride several major faults in the earth's crust, and is prone to frequent earthquakes.

In February, a quake measuring 6.4 on the Richter scale hit the southern town of Zarand, killing 612 people and wounding around 1,400.

In December 2003, the southeastern city of Bam was razed by a 6.7 degree quake that left more than 31,000 people dead.

Mehdi Zareh, the head of Iran's Seismic Research Centre, said there was no tsunami risk from the latest quake.

"Because the Persian Gulf is not very deep, a tsunami is not expected," he told the student news agency ISNA.

Contacted by telephone, a hotel worker in Qeshm described the quake as "very strong".

"We were panicked. I saw an injured person with blood on their clothes being taken to a local hospital," said the hotel worker, who asked for her name not to be used.

The quake was also felt across the Gulf in the United Arab Emirates where residents fled high-rise office and apartment buildings.

"I took my baby and ran down the 10 flights to the street," one alarmed resident of Dubai said.

"Most of the country's regions were affected by an earthquake of medium magnitude, felt particularly by inhabitants in the northern Emirates," Emirati transport ministry official Sheikha Muza al-Muallah was quoted as saying by the official WAM agency.

Oman's Sultan Qabus University observatory said the earthquake's epicentre was in Bandar Abbas itself, he added.

The UAE interior ministry said no damage had so far been reported and Dubai police chief General Dhahi Khalfan sought to reassure residents, calling in a radio interview for people to "get back to work or go home."

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UN Criticises India Refusal To Share Data On Low Magnitude Quakes
Hyderabad, India (AFP) Dec 16, 2005
India said Friday it would not share information on earthquakes below a magnitude of six on the Richter scale due to security concerns, drawing criticism from the United Nations.







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